Agentic RevOps replaces the sprawling, seat-priced tool stack of the last decade with a small set of AI agents that build the ideal customer profile, find the right accounts, and prepare outreach for human review. Cliff Simon argues that a $10 million company today should build "as agentically as possible" — a CRM, a conversational intelligence tool, an orchestration layer, and a model like Claude reading from markdown context files, rather than a dozen overlapping point solutions.
The economics are the headline. Simon estimates that the front half of client acquisition — data, enrichment, signal scraping, and sequencing — can move from roughly $500,000 in annual tooling to a $25,000 to $50,000 agentic stack, while also retiring two to four business development reps or repurposing them into higher-touch roles. The savings are not the point on their own; the point is that the same money now buys far more capability, provided the team has an oversight layer that ties what the agents build back to business value. Simon is blunt that many go-to-market engineers are "glorified growth hackers" who can configure tools but cannot connect them to revenue outcomes.
For partner and channel leaders, the lesson transfers directly. The same agentic logic that compresses a direct-sales stack can compress the operational load of running a partner program. ZINFI’s Unified Partner Management (UPM) platform consolidates onboarding, enablement, deal registration, marketing, incentives, and co-sell into a single system, so a channel team does not have to stitch together a separate tool for each motion. Where Simon builds an AI-native acquisition engine, a modern channel organization needs an AI-native partner relationship management software layer — one platform of record for the full partner lifecycle rather than a portal bolted to a spreadsheet.
"I think you can really replace half a million dollars in tech spend on that front half of client acquisition with agentic tools that might run you twenty-five thousand, fifty thousand dollars instead."
— Cliff Simon